166 PONTIFICIAE ACADEMIAE SCIENTIARVM SCRIPTA VARIA be done without forecast errors. The relationships describing the impact of these forces and of the variables controlled by the decision maker are not known with certainty either. The decision maker must therefore make his decisions (prepare his Plan) under conditions of uncertainty. Now there is the im- portant feature that this uncertainty diminishes in the course of time. For example, how the outside forces behave in year I is unknown at the beginning of the year, at least not known with certainty, so that the decision to be made at the beginning of that year must be based on a forecast which is generally imperfect. At the beginning of year 2 one should know more about how the outside forces have behaved in year I; also, one may have better ideas about how they will behave in year 2, because this is now « nearer future » than it was a year before. Clearly, the decision maker is in a position to take this new information into account when formulating his decision for year 2. But the Plan does not! The Plan was made at the beginning of year 1 and what it has to say about things to be done in year 2 is therefore necessarily based on the smaller amount of information which was available at the beginning of vear I. This is of course generally recognized. It is the reason why a Plan is almost never taken completely seriously in the sense that it is executed literally until the very end. Plans are re- vised regularly in the light of new evidence. But this happens after the events, not before as is done by a « strategy » or « decision rule ». The main argument of this paper is that it is worthwhile to consider the possibility of development strate- gies instead of development plans. That is, rather than fixing once and for all what is to be done in year 1, in year 2, in year 3, ..., we consider a procedure of the following kind: now, at the beginning of year 1, a decision for that year is formulated and at the same time also a rule specifying what is to be done in years 2, 3, ... depending on the information that will be available by that time. The advantage of this pro- 71 Theil - pag. 2